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__________________ [SIGPIC][/SIGPIC] [B] "... the days ahead will be filled with struggle ... and coated in marzipan ... "[/B] |
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A) completely accurate B) with which I am in complete agreement, and C) channels Hunter S. Thompson. Kudos, sir!
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Hopefully Powerhouse/Indicator will use the same/similar transfer the French have used for Blind Terror/See No Evil. I watched it yesterday and it looks INCREDIBLE! The French subs are,thankfully removable. STILL a fantastic little British thriller,and I suspect James Watkins of Eden Lake infamy is a fan as well.....
__________________ Teddy, I'm a Scotch drinker - you know that. I just have the occasional brandy when I'm not drinking. |
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Respectable-Poster-18.jpg RESPECTABLE- THE MARY MILLINGTON STORY (2016) Excellent companion documentary to Simon Sheridans book 'Come Play With Me, The Life And Films Of Mary Millington. Lasting nearly two hours, the doc is full of interviews, clips and photos of Mary's life. If you have read the book then most of the content will be familiar to you but there are interviews with people from Mary's past including David Sullivan that expand the story. |
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Dario Argento's Door into darkness door into d.jpg Episode 1 - The Neighbour Dario's short lived T.v series, and although the picture quality is not amazing i found this perfectly watchable. I'd mean't to catch up with these for a while after buying the dvd set in January, but have only just got around to it, well the first episode so far. I enjoyed this episode in which we get a brief intro by Dario then enter the story of a couple who are moving house with a baby to a isolated place by the coast. Arriving at night they have no furniture and also no lights working so have to use a candle, they go upstairs to ask a neighbour for some assistance but are told to go away. Left to their own devices with only a candle and a T.V for company (showing Abbot and Costello meet Frankenstein) they hear the neighbour leave and after noticing a stain spreading on their ceiling go upstairs to investigate. They find the dead body of a woman and a bath left running hence the stain. Attempting to leave their car will not start so they are left stranded in the house fearing what will happen if the neighbour returns, the candle flickers out and the couple realise they have left their lighter in the bathroom upstairs... I found this pretty tense and even though it's a basic Hitchcockian premise i thought it was handled well by director Luigi Cozzi and was worried for the couple and their baby as the drama run it's course. At just under an hour it doesn't outstay it's welcome and i'am now looking forward to watching the remaining episodes. 7/10
__________________ MIKE: I've got it! Peter Cushing! We've got to drive a stake through his heart! VYVYAN: Great! I'll get the car! NEIL: I'll get a cushion. |
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Aftermath. A terrible tragedy has aftershocks that result in another tragedy in this dark drama starring Arnold Schwarzenegger. Arnie is an ordinary man whose world collapses around him when his wife and daughter are killed in a plane crash, the result of human error on the part of the Air Traffic Controller, whose life simultaneously collapses in the wake of his fatal mistake. But Arnie's grief, shock and growing anger at his inability to get a simple "I'm sorry" from anyone in the airline leads him to an unthinkable act... Big Arnie gives a powerful performance in this very good film based on a shocking true story. Probably won't buy it though, I don't think it's the type of film for repeat viewings. Not exactly a barrel of laughs, know what I mean... |
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zz7PUWwL9xZpVV54I7x425RfXUL.jpg FRANKENSTEIN THE TRUE STORY (1973) Superb two part TV series clocking in at three hours. First shown in the UK on the BBC in 1975 the series did have a limited theatrical run in an edited two hour version. The original title was to be 'Dr Frankenstein' but was changed to 'The True Story' much to the disgust of the writers as this is not the TRUE story of the novel but an original work with ideas from the book. Any fans of this TV series should check out the new Little Shoppe Of Horrors #38 magazine as it is devoted to this production and is jam solid with the story of getting this made and is a terrific read. |
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NO-ONE LIVES – Fun schlocker from the director of 'Versus' and 'Azumi'. It's about a family of armed robbers who tangle with the wrong dude after one of their gigs goes badly wrong. Just how 'wrong' aforementioned dude is becomes apparent when all those news reports from 'America's Most Wanted' point in one direction only... 'No-one Lives' is slick and has a certain relentlessness to it. It also has that heightened sense of slightly delirious badassery you want from films about unrealistic criminals taking on unrealistic criminals, and some pretty good gore in places. Definitely worth a shot if you haven't already. THE CHURCH – 'The Church' isn't Soavi's shining hour, but it still gets a few things right. I realised this after witnessing a few scenes of languid chaos in a church (in The Church, actually) give way to an equally casual shot-in-passing of a kid sat around playing a trumpet. Ah, it takes a special mind to conceive of such things... meanwhile, the world carries on turning. Anyway, for the uninitiated (see what I just did there ?), 'The Church' is about a church, The Church (stop it, Frankie), built over a pit containing the victims of a pogrom-type massacre from back in the day, which is about to unleash something demonic because of a meddling historian (or something). As is usual with this kind of thing, story and plot take a back seat to atmosphere. There is some of that, but there's also a lot of plodding. When Soavi lays on the visuals they seem appropriately majestic and otherwordly in a Ken Russel kind of way, and elevate the film towards the shining beacon it could've been with a little less 'scene setting'. DEMON SEED – From the late D Cammell comes this strange item which is part sci fi / horror pot boiler and part excursion into mysticism. You would expect the latter from someone who was partly responsible for 'Performance'. In 'Demon Seed', a conscious computer takes over Julie Christie's futuristic household and basically rapes her for the sake of having a child. This robo-roughie element is dealt with quite coldly, and lends a real curdled undercurrent to a movie which is for most part about a captor – captive dynamic. Gender politics aside (they are ambiguous here ultimately) 'Demon Seed' is utterly of its time and is furnished with a very seventies imagining of the shape of things to come. More interesting is the post-hippie aspect, with its occasionally trippy visuals, droney electronic soundtrack and frequent hand wringing about the nature of consciousness. |
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